So far, the Republican National Convention has seen a raucous fight over the party’s rules and accusations of plagiarism against presidential candidate Donald Trump’s wife. And that was from the first day.

Even in the age of prepackaged, made-for-television political conventions, there are often unexpected stories that arise in the course of four days. But the gathering in Cleveland has seen a degree of drama not experienced in some time.

It’s not Chicago in 1968. But it also hasn’t been a placid launch.

“There’s always an upside to going first in the convention cycle and a downside,” said Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida who is in Cleveland. “We’ve already seen the downside.”

On Monday afternoon, the question of whether the convention would approve the rules on a voice vote or through a roll call vote — the outcome was not really in doubt — led to a boisterous scene on the floor. Delegates traded chants over the fight, and the convention essentially ground to a standstill at one point for 10 minutes.

The highlight of the first day for Trump’s campaign seemed to be a speech by his wife, Melania, meant to highlight the softer side of the outspoken businessman perhaps best known for telling reality television contestants, “You’re fired.”

But within hours, allegations were bubbling up that portions of the speech appeared to have been lifted from a similar convention address by First Lady Michelle Obama. The Trump campaign denied that any plagiarism took place.

“You guys can’t have it both ways,” he told reporters. “You know, you bemoan the sterile, scripted conventions and then you get a very unscripted moment yesterday, and you’re complaining about that. This is anything but a conventional convention.”

Some of that might be due to the controversial nature of the presidential candidate. Trump’s victory laid bare the strains between the Republican establishment and parts of the party’s grass-roots base.

Democrats have been almost giddy about the distractions in Cleveland. The campaign of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is set to accept the Democratic Party’s nomination next week in Philadelphia, has been largely mum on the controversy over Melania Trump’s speech.

But it has been more than happy to play up the rules vote and some of the more heated speeches from the podium.

“Day 1 of the Republican convention was a mess on so many levels,” said Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida congresswoman. “We heard a lot of anger, a lot of yelling, but no substance — just empty rhetoric and divisive language.”

Even as contested conventions have become a thing of the past, distractions at the events are hardly new. A procedural fight over the Democratic platform in 2012 led Republicans to proclaim that delegates to that convention had booed God. (They mostly appeared to be protesting the way changes to the platform were pushed through.)

“This is when an election is filled with distractions,” MacManus said.

Outgoing Florida House Speaker Steve Crisafulli, R-Merritt Island, also argued that the kerfuffles were nothing new, even if this year’s sideshows were drawing more scrutiny from the estimated 15,000 reporters who have descended on north Ohio. And he said things would soon change.

“The reality is, I think that the focus over the next day or so will start to become more behind our nominee and what he’s going to be able to do as the Republican presidential candidate,” Crisafulli said.

The question is whether any votes have been swayed by the dissension in Cleveland, or whether voters will view it as insider baseball. For now, the GOP appears to be banking that the latter is the case.

“People are going to vote about jobs, they’re going to vote about destroying ISIS,” said Gov. Rick Scott, who has pushed for party unity, when asked about the rules fight. “That’s what the election’s going to be about.”

Scott hit Cleveland for the convention on Tuesday, telling reporters that GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump will win Florida the same way Scott shocked the state’s political establishment six years ago.

Speaking to a variety of reporters and radio shows on media row — across the street from the main convention venue — Scott explicitly compared his upstart bid for governor in 2010 to Trump’s presidential run in 2016. Scott also hammered away at former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidential candidate, for not destroying the Islamic State terrorist organization.

Scott is set to address the convention Wednesday evening, one day before Trump formally accepts the party’s presidential nomination and launches his general election campaign. It will be difficult for Trump to cobble together the 270 electoral votes needed to take the White House without the 29 from Florida.

Leaning on his own experience winning the state, Scott predicted Trump, a real-estate mogul, “is going to have a big win” in Florida in November.

“It’s similar to my race in 2010,” Scott said. “If you go to the issues that people care about, it’s jobs — it’s jobs, it’s jobs, it’s jobs. It’s a clear choice. Donald Trump knows how to create jobs; Hillary Clinton has never created a job in her life. She’s a career politician and this is not the year to be a career politician.”

There are certainly similarities between the two campaigns. Trump ran against the lion’s share of the GOP establishment this year, as Scott did in 2010, and rode a grass-roots wave of support to the nomination. Both are businessmen who built large fortunes but later faced questions about some of their methods.

In fact, Democrats were already moving Tuesday to counter Trump’s message on his ability to manage the economy because of his business experience.

“He’s made a career out of making himself rich at the expense of everyone else,” Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who is also a Florida congresswoman, said at a press conference in Cleveland.

Scott did not endorse Trump before the Florida presidential primary but has become one of the billionaire’s most enthusiastic supporters among elected officials. In Florida, former Gov. Jeb Bush and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio have stayed away from Cleveland during the convention, though Rubio will appear by video.

Scott said he will use his speech Wednesday to push the need for the party to unite behind the presumptive nominee and will even use Trump’s reality television career to make the point.

“One of the things I’m going to talk about is that he’s uniquely qualified to fire the Washington politicians, because you watched his 14 years on ‘The Apprentice,’ ” Scott said.

I dont give a damn a about any of the poltics. They are all full of shit. They get in office and its an entire different ball game.
I just know all of florida has gone to crap .
Im going to be moving out of this state all together. It used to be a fun place and happy times. Its the pitts now. Im talking all of florida. Not just palm coast. Its just gone to shit. So. The only thing now is to get gone.

Florida is still a great place to live. Sure we could use more jobs and less crime, but that’s everywhere. I think we will all have a change for the good when the Democrats stop leading for a decade or two. This comment made me laugh so hard I cried~Re: Trump “He’s made a career out of making himself rich at the expense of everyone else,” Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who is also a Florida congresswoman, said at a press conference in Cleveland.~The Dems never understand business and that’s why America’s debt is at $19B+. Hillary Clinton got rich at the expense of America, that’s totally unacceptable to me. Remember this when you are deciding who to vote for: If Trump does something wrong, everyone will know. If/when Hillary does something wrong no one will.

It’s been a train wreck from the opening benediction that sounded like a campaign speech to a supposed first woman (can’t really use the word lady) who plagiarized portions of her speech and who’s resume includes nude photos. Washed up actors, reality stars ( and I use the word star very loosely), religious wackos who think we need funerals for aborted fetuses ( that would be Pence), and that Clinton worships the devil ( that would be Ben “they store grain in pyramids” Carson).

“Raucous fight”? Maybe you should speak to the actual delegates before you jump to that conclusion. The few Never Trumpers have not succeeded in overshadowing this historic event. They were a minor distraction so much so that the average convention viewer never noticed them.

Good luck to Anonymous in S. Texas. Soon there will be a big ugly wall to look at too.

For those who think Trump is the bastion of honesty and integrity, look in to all of the lawsuits against him from small businesses that he refuses to pay. It is cheaper for him to hire a pit bull attorney to bully those small businesses into taking a fraction of what he owes them then it is to actually pay them for the work they did for him. Businesses have gone bankrupt because of his practices. He is just as big a liar as any politician. The difference is that business is done in the dark, and politicians are “expected” to do their dealings above board. We know exactly what we are getting with Hillary, we have no idea what we are getting with Trump.

If you are still not sure who to vote for check out the Gary Johnson ticket.

Don’t forget Trump’s air kiss to Pence and the Laura Ingraham Nazi salute…

Over the past few days none of what the republican party has highlighted is White House worthy but Newt Gingrich and maybe Chris Christie. I’ve never seen such a pile of hasbeens and money made me famous guests since i sat though one episode of TMZ.

Also I love how they are calling for Hillary for Prison after the last GOP president had between 2001-2009 13 attacks on US embassies we had 60 deaths and a major terror attack on our Soil that killed thousands of Americans, almost destroyed NYC (and they knew it was coming and made no changes, Trump said so too) and pushed us into a war in Iraq that may have started the ISIS movement. But then again facts don’t make good talking points and bumper stickers.

If this is the best the party of Lincoln, Reagan and Bush SR can offer, Hillary is going to enjoy her 8 years. I just hope she picks a VP that doesn’t make me hold my nose.